More information has been released on the motives behind the Fort
Hood army base shooting, which left 13 people dead and 38 wounded,
some physically impaired for life. Wow, how sad.
As covered yesterday, the alleged shooter, Maj. Nidal Hasan, was
openly expressing his approval of Jihad activities and getting into
arguments with soldiers on the base. That was a bad sign.

President Obama has asked that people not jump to
conclusions regarding the shooter's Muslim heritage

The FBI, headed up by questionable director, Robert S. Mueller, has been floating various excuses in the press, including
blaming the DOJ, in the Washington Post, claiming their guidelines
tied the hands of the error prone law enforcement agency, when it
was recently revealed, they were given the shooter's name six
months ago. However, if one makes a written threat to kill the President of the
United States, one is eligible for investigation and imprisonment,
as has happened to several people. Therefore, you mean to tell me, a
man can go on the internet and in writing, call for Jihad, urging
Muslims to murder and blow up Americans and the FBI can't do
a thing about it. Why am I not buying that story.

FBI Director Robert S. Mueller and Senator Arlen
Specter

People who espouse pro-Jihad views and make statements to
that effect, verbal or written, generally do not fall under the category of
mild mannered mischief. Threatening Jihad is some serious stuff. You act
like he threatened to throw eggs at someone. He was writing about throwing
bombs.
The FBI also cited a heavy workload, as another possible excuse. If the
agency didn't have a million and one initiatives and task forces, maybe it
could gain some focus and direction. I do not know how they keep track of
them all and this is apart of the problem.

Maj. Nidal Hasan

Whatever happened to putting things into simple
categories, such as "national security" "terrorism" "pedophiles"
"civil rights" "white collar" and "computer crimes."
Keep it simple. Then, divide
the agents into those categories. Instead, the FBI is disorganized, too compartmentalized, tribalized,
fragmented and splintered, as they literally have hundreds of
departments and initiatives, with ridiculously long titles that no
one can truly remember off the top of their head the first dozen times. Gain
some focus and cohesion. Consolidate.
Once again, I do not understand the FBI, as their ways make no sense
to those operating under the principles of logic, order and common
sense.

STORY SOURCE

Probe of suspect's motive begins

The FBI contends with a heavy volume of Internet comments from white
supremacists, religious radicals and other fringe groups...Additionally, under Justice Department guidelines, the FBI cannot
open an investigation based solely on a person's speech, even if it
demonstrates racist or extremist tendencies. The rules applied to
James W. von Brunn, the alleged Holocaust Memorial Museum shooter
whose writings had come to the attention of law enforcement but who
was not investigated before the deadly attack this year.

Saturday November 07 2009 - His name appears above radical internet
postings discussing Islamic suicide bombers in a favourable light --
something the FBI was alerted to six months ago.
He became involved in frequent arguments with soldiers at Fort Hood
because of his declarations that fellow Muslims "should stand
up and fight against the aggressor", and his vocal opposition
to US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He even appeared to celebrate the shooting death of a soldier at an
Army recruiting centre in Arkansas in June, carried out by a Muslim
convert. He said at the time that Muslims should strap on suicide
bombs and detonate them in New York's Times Square.
These extraordinarily provocative statements and actions by US army
psychiatrist Major Nidal Malik Hasan came months before his massacre
at Fort Hood, which began with him shouting "God is Great"
in Arabic...

After the shooting in Little Rock, Colonel Lee added: "He
seemed happy about it. He said . . . maybe we should get out of Iraq
and Afghanistan. He said maybe . . . people should strap bombs on
themselves and go into Times Square."
Six months ago, the FBI was alerted to a posting on a website called
Scribd.com, under the username "NadalHasan", comparing the
actions of an American soldier who threw himself on a grenade in
Iraq with those of Islamist suicide bombers.

"He intentionally took his life for a noble cause, saving the
lives of his soldier. To say that this soldier committed suicide is
inappropriate. It's more appropriate to say he is a brave
hero," Nadal Hasan wrote.
"If one suicide bomber can kill 100 enemy soldiers because they
were caught off guard, that would be considered a strategic
victory."
US officials said the FBI looked into the posting but had not begun
an official investigation by the time of the shooting....

Hmm. Can't imagine what Major Malik Nadal Hasan's motivation could
have been

November 6th, 2009 - Nor it seems can the liberal mainstream media.
I was watching BBC’s Newsnight when the story broke of a killing
spree at a Texas military base and instantly wondered – as I’m
sure did 99.99 per cent of its other viewers – whether this had
anything to do with the Religion of Peace. Then a news update came
in that the suspect’s name was ‘Hasan’. But the BBC’s
reporter hastened to reassure us that there was “no evidence” to
suggest this was an act of “terrorism”. Phew! Perish the
unworthy thought.

Even today, the MSM is treading on eggshells regarding the killer’s
possible motivation....
And, yes, of course, that old favourite – passive combat stress:
Having counseled scores of returning soldiers with post-traumatic
stress disorder, first at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in
Washington and more recently at Fort Hood, he knew all too well the
terrifying realities of war, said a cousin, Nader Hasan. “He was
mortified by the idea of having to deploy,” Mr. Hasan said. “He
had people telling him on a daily basis the horrors they saw over
there.”